Assign 7

course Phy 232

SĹƭ¡JxŰ㥷assignment #007

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007. `Query 28

Physics II

03-18-2007

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16:37:18

Query introductory problems set 54 #'s 1-7.

Explain how to obtain the magnetic field due to a given current through a small current segment, and how the position of a point with respect to the segment affects the result.

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RESPONSE -->

I know that F = I*L*B so B = (I*L)/F where I is current and L would be the size of the segment. I'm assuming we find F from the deflection of the segment to the position of the point.

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16:37:26

** IL is the source. The law is basically an inverse square law and the angle theta between IL and the vector r from the source to the point also has an effect so that the field is

B = k ' I L / r^2 * sin(theta). **

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RESPONSE -->

.....*dumb look*

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16:37:40

Query principles and general college physics problem 17.34: How much charge flows from each terminal of 7.00 microF capacitor when connected to 12.0 volt battery?

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RESPONSE -->

Q = C * V = 7 * 12 = 84

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16:38:05

Capacitance is stored charge per unit of voltage: C = Q / V. Thus the stored charge is Q = C * V, and the battery will have the effect of transferring charge of magnitude Q = C * V = 7.00 microF * 12.0 volts = 7.00 C / volt * 12.0 volts = 84.0 C of charge.{}{}This would be accomplished the the flow of 84.0 C of positive charge from the positive terminal, or a flow of -84.0 C of charge from the negative terminal. Conventional batteries in conventional circuits transfer negative charges.

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RESPONSE -->

With my background, I can't fathom it flowing from pos to neg - so I neglect the sign, assuming it is understood that an amount of 84 Coulombs is being transferred from negative to positive.

The entire theory of electromagnetism was developed before anyone knew what was carrying the charge. Maxwell's equations and their implications were worked out by the late 1800's. The electron was discovered in the very late 1800's and atomic theory was developed in the early 1900's. So when + and - were assigned to different kinds of charges, nobody knew that electrons existed, much less that they were responsible for conduction in metals, or for lightening strikes. By the time electrons and their role were discovered, all the books had been written, engineers had all the conventions, including the one that current flowed from + to - and it was too late to change.

Then along came electronics, hole conduction, etc., and that field developed a new set of conventions consistent with the new knowledge.

The direction of conventional current is opposite to the direction of electron flow, which is the same as the direction in which negative ions move in a discharge tube. Conventional current is in the direction of hole migration, the direction in which positive ions would move.

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16:38:11

Explain how to obtain the magnetic field due to a circular loop at the center of the loop.

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RESPONSE -->

B = k * I * dL / r^2 (all points are perpendicular to the center, so the angle is always 90 and sin(90) is 1) add all the dL's (which is equivalent to the circumference regardless of how small each dL is)

B = (k * I * (2 pi r))/r^2 = (k * I * 2 pi)/r

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16:38:19

** For current running in a circular loop:

Each small increment `dL of the loop is a source I `dL. The vector from `dL to the center of the loop has magnitude r, where r is the radius of the loop, and is perpendicular to the loop so the contribution of increment * `dL to the field is k ' I `dL / r^2 sin(90 deg) = I `dL / r^2, where r is the radius of the loop. The field is either upward or downward by the right-hand rule, depending on whether the current runs counterclockwise or clockwise, respectively. The field has this direction regardless of where the increment is located.

The sum of the fields from all the increments therefore has magnitude

B = sum(k ' I `dL / r^2), where the summation occurs around the entire loop. I and r are constants so the sum is

B = k ' I / r^2 sum(`dL).

The sum of all the length increments around the loop is the circumference 2 pi r of the loop so we have

B = 2 pi r k ' I / r^2 = 2 pi k ' I / r. **

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RESPONSE -->

right.

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16:38:25

Query magnetic fields produced by electric currents.

What evidence do we have that electric currents produce magnetic fields?

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RESPONSE -->

The way the aluminum strips were attracted or repelled when the generator was turned but were not affected w/out any energy flow.

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16:38:49

STUDENT RESPONSE: We do have evidence that electric currents produce magnetic fields. This is observed in engineering when laying current carrying wires next to each other. The current carrying wires produce magnetic fields that may affect other wires or possibly metal objects that are near them. This is evident in the video experiment. When Dave placed the metal ball near the coil of wires and turned the generator to produce current in the wires the ball moved toward the coil. This means that there was an attraction toward the coil which in this case was a magnetic field.

INSTRUCTOR COMMENT:

Good observations. A very specific observation that should be included is that a compass placed over a conducting strip or wire initially oriented in the North-South direction will be deflected toward the East-West direction. **

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RESPONSE -->

didn't see the compass

should have been in a video clip that you should have been instructed to view; however the instruction might have gone astray

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16:39:08

How is the direction of an electric current related to the direction of the magnetic field that results?

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RESPONSE -->

The right hand rule mentioned - used for torque as well. The thumb is the direction of current and the relaxed fingers are the rotational or lateral direction of the magnetic field.

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16:39:42

** GOOD STUDENT RESPONSE:

The direction of the magnetic field relative to the direction of the electric current can be described using the right hand rule. This means simply using your right hand as a model you hold it so that your thumb is extended and your four fingers are flexed as if you were holding a cylinder. In this model, your thumb represents the direction of the electric current in the wire and the flexed fingers represent the direction of the magnetic field due to the current. In the case of the experiment the wire was in a coil so the magnetic field goes through the hole in the middle in one direction. **

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RESPONSE -->

yes.

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16:39:48

Query problem 17.35

What would be the area of a .20 F capacitor if plates are separated by 2.2 mm of air?

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RESPONSE -->

c = A /(4 pi k d)

A = 4 pi * k * d * C

A = 4 pi * 9 x 10^9 * .0022 * .2 = 5 x 10^7

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16:40:08

** If a parallel-plate capacitor holds charge Q and the plates are separated by air, which has dielectric constant very close to 1, then the electric field between the plates is E = 4 pi k sigma = 4 pi k Q / A, obtained by applying Gauss' Law to each plate. The voltage between the plates is therefore V = E * d, where d is the separation.

The capacitance is C = Q / V = Q / (4 pi k Q / A * d) = A / (4 pi k d).

Solving this formula C = A / (4 pi k d) for A for the area we get A = 4 pi k d * C

If capacitance is C = .20 F and the plates are separated by 2.2 mm = .0022 m we therefore have

A = 4 pi k d * C = 4 pi * 9 * 10^9 N m^2 / C^2 * .20 C / V * .0022 m =

5 * 10^7 N m^2 / C^2 * C / ( J / C) * m =

5 * 10^7 N m^2 / (N m) * m =

5 * 10^7 m^2. **

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RESPONSE -->

realization: I need to start writing down units

units are really helpful in understanding these relationships, and also in documenting the meaning of your work.

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16:40:10

Query problem 17.50 charge Q on capacitor; separation halved as dielectric with const K inserted; by what factor does the energy storage change? Compare the new electric field with the old.

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RESPONSE -->

Doubling the separation will halve the energy storage since doubling the voltage in c=q/v halves the capacitance

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16:40:13

Note that the problem in the latest version of the text doubles rather than halves the separation. The solution for the halved separation, given here, should help you assess whether your solution was correct, and if not should help you construct a detailed and valid self-critique.

** For a capacitor we know the following:

Electric field is independent of separation, as long as we don't have some huge separation.

Voltage is work / unit charge to move from one plate to the other, which is force / unit charge * distance between plates, or electric field * distance. That is, V = E * d.

Capacitance is Q / V, ration of charge to voltage.

Energy stored is .5 Q^2 / C, which is just the work required to move charge Q across the plates with the 'average' voltage .5 Q / C (also obtained by integrating `dW = `dQ * V = `dq * q / C from q=0 to q = Q).

The dielectric increases capacitance by reducing the electric field, which thereby reduces the voltage between plates. The electric field will be 1 / k times as great, meaning 1/k times the voltage at any given separation.

C will increase by factor k due to dielectric, and will also increase by factor 2 due to halving of the distance. This is because the electric field is independent of the distance between plates, so halving the distance will halve the voltage between the plates. Since C = Q / V, this halving of the denominator will double C.

Thus the capacitance increases by factor 2 k, which will decrease .5 Q^2 / C, the energy stored, by factor 2 k. **

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RESPONSE -->

I guess if halving the doubles then doubling will halve

if the dielectric constant remains the same, then the field is essentially the same for any small separation; the voltage is therefore proportional to separation. Since capacitance is inversely proportional to voltage, it is inversely proportional to plate separation

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16:40:15

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RESPONSE -->

???

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16:40:24

query univ 24.50 (25.36 10th edition). Parallel plates 16 cm square 4.7 mm apart connected to a 12 volt battery.

What is the capacitance of this capacitor?

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RESPONSE -->

C = Q/V

12 = 4 pi * 9 x 10^9 * .0047 (Q/.0256)

Q = 5.779 x 10^-10

C = 5.779 x 10^-10/12 = 4.816 x 10^-11

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16:40:32

** Fundamental principles include the fact that the electric field is very neary constant between parallel plates, the voltage is equal to field * separation, electric field from a single plate is 2 pi k sigma, the work required to displace a charge is equal to charge * ave voltage, and capacitance is charge / voltage. Using these principles we reason out the problem as follows:

If the 4.7 mm separation experiences a 12 V potential difference then the electric field is

E = 12 V / (4.7 mm) = 12 V / (.0047 m) = 2550 V / m, approx.

Since the electric field of a plane charge distribution with density sigma is 2 pi k sigma, and since the electric field is created by two plates with equal opposite charge density, the field of the capacitor is 4 pi k sigma. So we have

4 pi k sigma = 2250 V / m and

sigma = 2250 V / m / (4 pi k) = 2250 V / m / (4 pi * 9 * 10^9 N m^2 / C^2) = 2.25 * 10^-8 C / m^2.

The area of the plate is .0256 m^2 so the charge on a plate is

.0256 m^2 * 2.25 * 10^-8 C / m^2 = 5.76 * 10^-10 C.

The capacitance is C = Q / V = 5.67 * 10^-10 C / (12 V) = 4.7 * 10^-11 C / V = 4.7 * 10^-11 Farads.

The energy stored in the capacitor is equal to the work required to move this charge from one plate to another, starting with an initially uncharged capacitor.

The work to move a charge Q across an average potential difference Vave is Vave * Q.

Since the voltage across the capacitor increases linearly with charge the average voltage is half the final voltage, so we have vAve = V / 2, with V = 12 V. So the energy is

energy = vAve * Q = 12 V / 2 * (5.76 * 10^-10 C) = 3.4 * 10^-9 V / m * C.

Since the unit V / m * C is the same as J / C * C = J, we see that the energy is

3.4 * 10^-9 J.

Pulling the plates twice as far apart while maintaining the same voltage would cut the electric field in half (the voltage is the same but charge has to move twice as far). This would imply half the charge density, half the charge and therefore half the capacitance. Since we are moving only half the charge through the same average potential difference we use only 1/2 the energy.

Note that the work to move charge `dq across the capacitor when the charge on the capacitor is `dq * V = `dq * (q / C), so to obtain the work required to charge the capacitor we integrate q / C with respect to q from q = 0 to q = Q, where Q is the final charge. The antiderivative is q^2 / ( 2 C ) so the definite integral is Q^2 / ( 2 C).

This is the same result obtained using average voltage and charge, which yields V / 2 * Q = (Q / C) / 2 * Q = Q^2 / (2 C)

Integration is necessary for cylindrical and spherical capacitors and other capacitors which are not in a parallel-plate configuration. **

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RESPONSE -->

check

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16:40:39

query univ 24.51 (25.37 10th edition). Parallel plates 16 cm square 4.7 mm apart connected to a 12 volt battery.

If the battery remains connected and plates are pulled to separation 9.4 mm then what are the capacitance, charge of each plate, electric field, energy stored?

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RESPONSE -->

This was asked earlier, doubling the distance will halve the capacitance, electric field, and energy stored. Referring to previous problem, that gives C = 2.408 x 10^-11, electric field is V/d = 12/9.4 = 1276

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16:40:41

The potential difference between the plates is originally 12 volts. 12 volts over a 4.7 mm separation implies

electric field = potential gradient = 12 V / (.0047 m) = 2500 J / m = 2500 N / C, approx..

The electric field is E = 4 pi k * sigma = 4 pi k * Q / A so we have

Q = E * A / ( 4 pi k) = 2500 N / C * (.16 m)^2 / (4 * pi * 9 * 10^9 N m^2 / C^2) = 5.7 * 10^-7 N / C * m^2 / (N m^2 / C^2) = 5.7 * 10^-10 C, approx..

The energy stored is E = 1/2 Q V = 1/2 * 5.6 * 10^-10 C * 12 J / C = 3.36 * 10^-9 J.

If the battery remains connected then if the plate separation is doubled the voltage will remain the same, while the potential gradient and hence the field will be halved. This will halve the charge on the plates, giving us half the capacitance. So we end up with a charge of about 2.8 * 10^-10 C, and a field of about 1250 N / C.

The energy stored will also be halved, since V remains the same but Q is halved.

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RESPONSE -->

forgot energy stored

E = 1/2 Q*V

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16:40:45

query univ 24.68 (25.52 10th edition). Solid conducting sphere radius R charge Q.

What is the electric-field energy density at distance r < R from the center of the sphere?

What is the electric-field energy density at distance r > R from the center of the sphere?

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RESPONSE -->

I have no clue where to start!!

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16:40:47

** The idea is that we have to integrate the energy density over all space. We'll do this by finding the total energy in a thin spherical shell of radius r and thickness `dr, using this result to obtain an expression we integrate from R to infinity, noting that the field of the conducting sphere is zero for r < R.

Then we can integrate to find the work required to assemble the charge on the surface of the sphere and we'll find that the two results are equal.

Energy density, defined by dividing the energy .5 C V^2 required to charge a parallel-plate capacitor by the volume occupied by its electric field, is

Energy density = .5 C V^2 / (volume) = .5 C V^2 / (d * A), where d is the separation of the plates and A the area of the plates.

Since C = epsilon0 A / d and V = E * d this gives us .5 epsilon0 A / d * (E * d)^2 / (d * A) = .5 epsilon0 E^2 so that

Energy density = .5 epsilon0 E^2, or in terms of k

Energy density = 1 / (8 pi k) E^2,

Since your text uses epsilon0 I'll do the same on this problem, where the epsilon0 notation makes a good deal of sense:

For the charged sphere we have for r > R

E = Q / (4 pi epsilon0 r^2), and therefore

energy density = .5 epsilon0 E^2 = .5 epsilon0 Q^2 / (16 pi^2 epsilon0^2 r^4) = Q^2 / (32 pi^2 epsilon0 r^4).

The energy density between r and r + `dr is nearly constant if `dr is small, with energy density approximately Q^2 / (32 pi^2 epsilon0 r^4).

The volume of space between r and r + `dr is approximately A * `dr = 4 pi r^2 `dr.

The expression for the energy lying between distance r and r + `dr is therefore approximately energy density * volume = Q^2 / (32 pi^2 epsilon0 r^4) * 4 pi r^2 `dr = Q^2 / (8 pi epsilon0 r^2) `dr.

This leads to a Riemann sum over radius r; as we let `dr approach zero we approach an integral with integrand Q^2 / (8 pi epsilon0 r^2), integrated with respect to r.

To get the energy between two radii we therefore integrate this expression between those two radii.

If we integrate this expression from r = R to infinity we get the total energy of the field of the charged sphere.

This integral gives us Q^2 / (8 pi epsilon0 R), which is the same as k Q^2 / (2 R).

The work required to bring a charge `dq from infinity to a sphere containing charge q is k q / R `dq, leading to the integral of k q / R with respect to q. If we integrate from q = 0 to q = Q we get the total work required to charge the sphere. Our antiderivative is k (q^2 / 2) / r. If we evaluate this antiderivative at lower limit 0 and upper limit Q we get k Q^2 / (2 R).

Since k = 1 / (4 pi epsilon0) the work is k Q^2 / (2 R) = k Q^2 / (8 pi epsilon0 R).

So the energy in the field is equal to the work required to assemble the charge distribution. **

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RESPONSE -->

that makes my brain hurt.

The idea in a nutshell:

When a uniform field E exists between the plates of a parallel-plate capacitor, the energy .5 C V^2 of the capacitor occupies volume d * A, where A is the area and d the separation. C is also related to d and A in such a way that

energy density = energy / volume = .5 epsilon0 E^2.

The field is E = 0 for r < R and E = Q / (2 pi epsilon0 r^2) for r > R, so energy density is 0 for r < R and .5 epsilon0 E^2 = Q^2 / (32 pi^2 epsilon0 r^4) for r > R.

Integrating the energy density over all space outside the sphere we get k Q^2 / (8 pi epsilon0 R).

Integrating to determine the work required to assemble the spherical shell of charge, starting with all charge at a distance, we get the same result.

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16:40:50

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RESPONSE -->

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"

Good. See my notes on that last problem and let me know if you have questions.